1,374 research outputs found
Attitude control for spacecraft Patent
Attitude control device for space vehicle
Phase separation in transparent liquid-liquid miscibility gap systems
A program to be carried out on transparent liquid-phase miscibility gap materials was developed for the purpose of acquiring additional insight into the separation process occurring in these systems. The transparency feature allows the reaction to be viewed directly through light scattering and holographic methods
Photonic band-gap properties for two-component slow light
We consider two-component "spinor" slow light in an ensemble of atoms
coherently driven by two pairs of counterpropagating control laser fields in a
double tripod-type linkage scheme. We derive an equation of motion for the
spinor slow light (SSL) representing an effective Dirac equation for a massive
particle with the mass determined by the two-photon detuning. By changing the
detuning the atomic medium acts as a photonic crystal with a controllable band
gap. If the frequency of the incident probe light lies within the band gap, the
light tunnels through the sample. For frequencies outside the band gap, the
transmission probability oscillates with increasing length of the sample. In
both cases the reflection takes place into the complementary mode of the probe
field. We investigate the influence of the finite excited state lifetime on the
transmission and reflection coefficients of the probe light. We discuss
possible experimental implementations of the SSL using alkali atoms such as
Rubidium or Sodium.Comment: 7 figure
Airloads on bluff bodies, with application to the rotor-induced downloads on tilt-rotor aircraft
The aerodynamic characteristics of airfoils with several flap configurations were studied theoretically and experimentally in environments that simulate a wing immersed in the downwash of a hovering rotor. Special techniques were developed for correcting and validating the wind tunnel data for large blockage effects, and the test results were used to evaluate two modern blockage effects, and the test results were used to evaluate two modern computational aerodynamics codes. The combined computed and measured results show that improved flap and leading-edge configurations can be designed which will achieve large reductions in the downloads of tilt-rotor aircraft, and thereby improve their hover efficiency
Onset of collective and cohesive motion
We study the onset of collective motion, with and without cohesion, of groups
of noisy self-propelled particles interacting locally. We find that this phase
transition, in two space dimensions, is always discontinuous, including for the
minimal model of Vicsek et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 75},1226 (1995)] for
which a non-trivial critical point was previously advocated. We also show that
cohesion is always lost near onset, as a result of the interplay of density,
velocity, and shape fluctuations.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Initial soil carbon losses may offset decades of biomass carbon accumulation in Mediterranean afforestation
Afforestation of degraded areas was suggested as CO2 sink, contributing to climate change mitigation. Yet, few studies have assessed this sink by combining measurements on carbon (C) in the biomass and the soil, despite it being crucial to properly estimate the mitigation potential. Here, we assessed the combined C stocks of afforestation plots of different ages on former cropland in a Cambisol landscape in Extremadura, Spain. The plots were afforested with two native tree species (Quercus ilex L. and Quercus suber L. in a density ratio of 3:1), planted at several occasions between 1998 and 2011. Stocks of afforested areas in 2022 were compared to non-afforested negative controls on arable land, to a closeby olive grove and a forest with signs of degradation. Tree biomass was estimated from allometric equations, soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks were measured to 30 cm depth, based on equivalent soil mass. The biomass C accumulation rate in afforested plots increased with tree density and elevation (p <0.05; range: 25 to 75 g C m2 yr 1). SOC stocks, in contrast, were not significantly different in afforested and non-afforested plots at any depth and in tendency even lower in afforested plots younger than 20 years. Consequently, total (biomass plus soil) C stocks in afforested plots were not significantly higher than in non-afforested ones. Nevertheless, SOC stocks and contents between the tree rows were significantly lower compared to soil next to the trees in the olive grove (about 1200 vs. 2200 g C m2 in the top 30 cm) and in tendency in the afforested plots (about 1200 vs. 1500 g C m2 in the top 30 cm; p <0.1). The fact that the degraded forest (about 6800 g C m2) and the olive grove (about 5300 g C m2) did have significantly higher total C stocks than the afforested and non-afforested sites (about 2300 and 1800 g C m2) could indicate that afforestation could soon become a C sink. However, our study clearly shows that afforestation is not automatically a C sink. Timing of different C pools` losses and gains affect net ecosystem carbon sequestration. While improved soil management in afforestation may reduce SOC losses, afforestation with Mediterranean Quercus trees under current management practices may require decades before being a C sink. This finding should temper expectations that afforestation with such tree species is a rapid solution to combat climate change
The bridge between social identity and community capital on the path to recovery and desistance
It has long been recognised that changes in social networks (and the underpinning changes in personal and social identity) are strong predictors of both desistance from crime and recovery from substance use. Building on existing work attempting to measure and shift social networks and transitions to prosocial groups, the current study provides pilot data from prisoners and family members about a visualisation technique widely used in specialist addiction treatment (node-link mapping) to map opportunities for linkage to prosocial groups and networks. The data presented in the paper are from a small-scale feasibility pilot. This suggests both bonding and bridging capital in prisoner populations due for release and the diversity of community capital opportunities that exists in this population. The implications of this work are significant for substance users and offenders pending return to the community, and has implications around resettlement and reintegration support for probation staff in prisons and in the community. The paper emphasises the importance of mapping connectedness as a key component of planning for reintegration back into the community for those working with offenders who are aspiring to achieve desistance and recovery
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